The Canon EOS-1D C Camera is a breakthrough in hybrid HDSLR technology, specifically designed for the unique demands of the motion picture industry, built to shoot cinematic quality, in a compact and versatile EOS body. The EOS-1D C is able to capture 18-megapixel (5184 x 3456) still images, 4K(4096 x 2160) and Full HD(1920 x 1080) video. And the still images, 4K/Full HD videos are directly recorded to its on-board CF memory cardsto either two on-board CF cards.
If you have used Canon EOS-1D C camera recorded 4K videos, you may want to import Canon EOS-1D C 4K videos to FCP X/6/7 for editing. But, the Canon EOS-1D C 4K video is not the supported format for FCP X editing, you will need to render, and some importing problems will be occured. Final Cut Pro X best supported format is Apple ProRes MOV, so the best method to import Canon EOS-1D C 4K videos to FCP X on Mac is transcoding Canon EOS-1D C 4K videos to Apple ProRes MOV. Follow the steps below to transcode Canon EOS-1D C 4K videos to Apple ProRes MOV for FCP X on Mac.
Guide: Convert Canon EOS-1D C 4K videos to Apple ProRes MOV
1. Download UFUWare HD Video Converter for Mac. This professional 4K Video Converter that can help you convert Canon EOS-1D C 4K videos to Apple ProRes MOV format for Final Cut Pro X, more output formats are also supported.
2. Install and launch this Canon EOS-1D C to FCP X Converter. When its main interface comes up, click “Add File” button to import Canon EOS-1D C 4K video files, or directly drag and drop the Canon 4K videos to the converter.
3. Click “Profile” bar to get the drop-down menu, and choose “Final Cut Pro > Apple ProRes 422 (*.mov)” as output format. Apple ProRes MOV is the best navtive format for Final Cut Pro.
Tip: You can click “settings” button to customize the output parameters, adjust the resolution, bitrate as you want.
4. Click “Convert” button to convert Canon EOS-1D C 4K videos to FCP X Apple ProRes MOV on Mac.
With this Canon EOS-1D C 4K Video to ProRes Converter, you can easily convert Canon EOS-1D C 4K videos to FCP X native format Apple ProRes MOV, and then you can import the converted files to Final Cut Pro X/7/6 for editing on Mac smoothly, Just have a try!